Wednesday, December 8, 2021

Earl Klugh - The Journey

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:35
Size: 119,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:14)  1. All Through the Night
(4:28)  2. Last Song
(3:58)  3. 4 Minute Samba
(5:05)  4. Sneakin' out of Here
(6:10)  5. The Journey
(4:19)  6. Good as It Gets
(5:53)  7. Fingerdance
(6:19)  8. Evil Eye
(3:59)  9. Walk in the Sun
(6:07) 10. Autumn Song

As is usual with Earl Klugh's recordings, Journey features the guitarist's pretty tone on melodic and lightly funky material. His backup band sounds very anonymous and none of his sidemen display an original personality. However Klugh's musicians do their job well, providing a safe background for the guitarist as he interprets ten of his original melodies. Earl Klugh collectors will most likely enjoy this effort due to his sound and the peaceful vibes, but those who prefer more adventurous music will not be converted. 
~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-journey-mw0000024744

Personnel: Earl Klugh - guitar, keyboards; Paul M. Jackson, Jr. - electric guitar; Al Turner - bass; Greg Phillinganes, David Spradley, Luis Resto, Albert Duncan - keyboards; Ray Manzerolle - synth wind; Ron Otis, Harvey Mason - drums; Paulinho da Costa - percussion; Lenny Price - saxophone; Johnny Mandel - orchestral arrangements, conductor

The Journey

The Boilermaker Jazz Band - Panama

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:35
Size: 141.0 MB
Styles: Swing
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[3:34] 1. I Would Do Anything For You
[5:50] 2. You Tell Me Your Dream
[4:12] 3. Did I Remember
[4:01] 4. New Orleans Joys
[5:55] 5. I'll See You In My Dreams
[3:54] 6. In The Good Old Summertime
[4:18] 7. Shoe Boogie
[4:37] 8. If I Had You
[6:57] 9. Panama
[5:43] 10. Just For A Thrill
[4:34] 11. Siboney
[4:12] 12. I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now
[3:43] 13. Little Grass Shack

Paul Cosentino - Clarinet/Leader; Clint Baker - Trumpet; Dan Davisson - Banjo; Gerry Gagnon - Trombone; Ernest McCarty - Bass; Tom Roberts - Piano; Rich Strong - Drums.

There seems to be a small but lively revival of swing music from the 1920's and 30's. Don Neely's San Francisco based Royal Society Jazz Orch. has been issuing CDs which delve into the charts from this period. Now along comes the Boilermaker Jazz Band out of Pittsburgh, PA headed by clarinetist Paul Cosentino. Cosentino uses the pretty much discarded complex Albert system of playing which was taught by the well known New Orleans clarinet teacher, Lorenzo Tio, Jr., in the early 1900's. Among his more famous pupils were Sidney Bechet and Barney Bigard. Using this system, Cosentino's clarinet takes on a soulful, sometimes mournful, mahogany sound which works well with the music and the style he plays it in which comes close to, but doesn't quite reach, New Orleans traditional.

All of the music on this set was written between 1902 and 1939 and most of it is played in an up tempo manner. But there are some surprises. We tend to forget that Latin rhythms were favored by the early New Orleans jazz players and Cosentino's group reminds us of that with "Siboney" with Gerry Gagnon's quivering trombone taking the lead. The waltz "In the Good Old Summertime" is done as a rip roaring barrelhouse swinger. "Little Grass Shack" has an uncredited singer backed by the banjo instead of ukelele. The more senior of us may recall that this tune was a favorite of Arthur Godfrey who did use a ukelele. One of the more engaging tracks is a blusey, melodic Cosentino clarinet on "If I Had You" followed by that unknown crooner.

Calling this group a band may be a bit of an overstatement. The biggest it gets is seven pieces. The quartet format is used for six tracks and a trio for one. But whatever the configuration, the outcome is an exciting, spirited and fun-filled session. Recommended. ~Dave Nathan

Panama

Joe Sample, Ray Brown, Shelly Manne - The Three

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1978
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 32:02
Size: 73,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:05)  1. Yearnin'
(5:17)  2. On Green Dolphin Street
(5:43)  3. Satin Doll
(6:02)  4. Manhã  De Carnaval
(4:38)  5. 'Round About Midnight
(5:14)  6. Funky Blues

Quite possibly one of the most successful Japanese piano trio recordings of the 70s a super-session performed by a group that includes Joe Sample on acoustic piano, Ray Brown on bass, and Shelly Manne on drums! Given that Sample's best known during the era for his electric keys with the Crusaders (and on countless studio sessions), it's a real treat to hear him tickle the ivories in an acoustic way and a genuine surprise to hear how strong his work is in such a format. Joe manages to swing the tunes with plenty of creative improvisation, but also keeps a strong focus on the groove too making for an album that's got some of the rhythmic flourishes of the best work of the Oscar Peterson trio in later years, but with some of the added freedoms of the Japanese scene. Titles include "On Green Dolphin Street", "Round Midnight", "Funky Blues", "Manha Do Carnaval", "Yearnin", and "Satin Doll".~https://www.dustygroove.com/item/731110

Personnel:  Joe Sample (piano);  Shelly Manne (drums);  Ray Brown (Bass).

The Three 

Tuesday, December 7, 2021

Jim Hall - Live in Tokyo

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1976
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:25
Size: 120,3 MB
Art: Front

( 9:08)  1. Billie's Bounce
( 4:55)  2. Twister
( 8:01)  3. Secret Love
( 8:45)  4. Concierto de Aranjuez
(10:57)  5. Chelsea Bridge
(10:37)  6. St. Thomas

One of a pair of recordings made during a tour of Japan for Paddlewheel (a subsidiary of King), the Jim Hall Trio, with bassist Don Thompson and drummer Terry Clarke, is in top form during this 1976 concert. The opener, Charlie Parker's "Billie's Bounce," is an introspective interpretation, though played with plenty of fire, while "Twister," a duo performance credited to both Hall and Clarke, may very well be an improvisation. 

A quiet piece like the excerpt from Rodrigo's "Concierto de Aranjeuz" is tailor-made for Hall's often subtle, rather understated approach to his instrument. First-rate versions of "Chelsea Bridge" and "St. Thomas" round out this highly recommended live set, which has never been issued outside of Japan nor made available on CD.~Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/live-in-tokyo-mw0001245277

Personnel:  Guitar – Jim Hall;  Bass – Don Thompson;  Drums – Terry Clarke

Live in Tokyo

Ramsey Lewis Trio - Sound Of Christmas

Styles: Piano, Christmas
Year: 1961
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 29:14
Size: 67,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:01)  1. Merry Christmas Baby
(2:08)  2. Winter Wonderland
(2:22)  3. Santa Claus Is Coming To Town
(2:47)  4. Christmas Blues
(2:39)  5. Here Comes Santa Claus
(2:19)  6. The Sound Of Christmas
(3:15)  7. The Christmas Song
(3:16)  8. God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen
(2:55)  9. Sleigh Ride
(3:27) 10. What Are You Doing New Year's Eve?

Those who purchase a Christmas album are mainly looking for festive music suitable for decorating the tree or baking cookies and not an introspective, challenging listening experience. Thus an artist who records such a record must take into account what the audience wants to hear and not his own musical aspirations, which may be why Mingus and Miles never recorded one. Ramsey Lewis, however, is the perfect guy for such a task, since he always approached playing jazz from the standpoint of creating a catchy hit with the public rather than arty noodling. Although recorded in 1961, a few years before he hit it big with "The 'In' Crowd," he still can swing harder than most at this early stage. Lewis and his trio barrel through the first five songs with a healthy dose of jubilant bounce and a penchant for uncovering the unexpected blue notes in carols. He glides through "Winter Wonderland" with heavy, funky chords and a propulsive snap but takes a more reverent approach on "Santa Claus Is Coming To Town," a slow, gospel-tinged treatment. The latter half of the album adds a string section (which fortunately doesn't oversaturate the music with glitz like on other Christmas albums) and Lewis tinkers around with the celeste a little bit here. "The Sound Of Christmas" is one of the most euphoric songs, a cascading wash of strings and bells awash with the glee of holiday tunes. While Lewis deserves most of the credit, Eldee Young and Redd Holt also deserve an extra candy cane for providing such enthusiastic support. Simply put, this is one of the most flat-out fun jazz Christmas albums you'll find. Lewis avoids the overly reverent no "Silent Night" or "What Child Is This?" in favor of songs he can tear through with the brisk gait of a sleigh ride and the delight of a full stocking. Lewis was later criticized for his eagerness to land on the charts, but his sensitivity to the tastes of the public served him well here. ~ David Rickert https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-sound-of-christmas-ramsey-lewis-verve-music-group-review-by-david-rickert.php

Personnel: Ramsey Lewis - piano; Eldee Young - bass; Redd Holt - drums; string section on 6-10.

Sound Of Christmas

Swingfield Big Band - Big Band Love Songs

Styles: Swing, Big Band
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:33
Size: 133,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:03) 1. Moonlight Serenade
(4:38) 2. I'll Be Seeing You
(3:43) 3. Someday My Prince Will Come
(4:42) 4. Over the Rainbow
(3:32) 5. Moon River
(3:13) 6. Blue Moon
(4:42) 7. Smoke Gets in Your Eyes
(4:44) 8. In a Sentimental Mood
(4:10) 9. Sentimental Journey
(4:02) 10. As Time Goes By
(4:23) 11. When You Wish Upon a Star
(3:58) 12. I'll Never Smile Again
(3:36) 13. Thanks for the Memory

Big Band Love Songs

Christian McBride & Inside Straight - Live at the Village Vanguard

Styles: Post-Bop, Straight-Ahead Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:50
Size: 185,7 MB
Art: Front

(12:01) 1. Sweet Bread
(13:42) 2. Fair Hope Theme
(10:02) 3. Ms. Angelou
( 8:18) 4. The Shade of the Cedar Tree
(14:54) 5. Gang Gang
(10:57) 6. Uncle James
( 9:52) 7. Stick & Move

You may feel a whole lot better about things after checking out Live at the Village Vanguard. Now, without argument or scholarly discourse, that can be said for any of the time honored performances captured under that heady title, but here it's Christian McBride and Inside Straight and seriously, this one has fun written all over it. An instant Top Tenner for 2021. Bassist/educator/advocate, McBride needs no further introduction save to say he has heightened fun into an art form. His playing, even at its most pensive and persuasive, proclaims that better times are here even if just for the immediate moment. The immediate gig. This immediate assemblage of keen minded, high flying musicians. And this is their last set of the three-night stand so they'd like to play for you now.

Vibraphonist Warren Wolf's infectiously soulful "Sweet Bread" sets a very high bar straight from the gate. But it's a bar that Inside Straight hurtles high over with each successive track. Moving like Muhammed Ali, "Sweet Bread" swings for the fences and the fences swing back on McBride's own swing-crazy "Fair Hope Theme." Pianist Peter Martin ranges all over the landscape, a singular acrobat among equals. His joyful, sinewy run on saxophonist Steve Wilson's "Ms.Angelou" is worth the price of admission and the two drink minimum. Carl AllenconjuresArt Blakey and this set never stops. The energy and vibe is so tangible on "Shade of the Cedar Tree" that it's impossible not to imagine yourself in one of the 123 or so seats that make for max capacity in the Vanguard. Elbow to elbow, head bopping, feet tapping, a smile on your face everyone sees in the walk down dark. You're on your second drink when "Gang Gang" high octanes to life: Darting, sparring, powering on.

By the time "Stick and Move" steam rolls over you, and McBride and Allen take your breath away in a serious of groove statements that leave you amazed, you can envision yourself one of the jubilant patrons, standing, cheering, applauding. It's the power of music Mach Ten. It's Live at the Village Vanguard.~Mike Jurkovic https://www.allaboutjazz.com/christian-mcbride-and-inside-straight-live-at-the-village-vanguard-christian-mcbride-and-inside-straight-mack-avenue-records

Personnel: Christian McBride: bass; Steve Wilson: saxophone, alto; Warren Wolf: vibraphone; Peter Martin: bass, acoustic; Carl Allen: drums.

Live at the Village Vanguard

Sunday, December 5, 2021

Sonny Stitt Quartet With Don Patterson - Low Flame + Feelin's

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1962
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:43
Size: 186,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:59) 1. Low Flame
(5:25) 2. Put Your Little Foot Right Out
(6:02) 3. Cynthia Sue
(4:40) 4. Donald Duck
(3:43) 5. Close Your Eyes
(4:59) 6. Silly Billy
(2:55) 7. Baby, Do You Ever Think Of Me?
(7:52) 8. Fine And Dandy
(3:48) 9. O Sole Mio
(3:56) 10. Feelin's
(2:21) 11. Nightmare
(6:23) 12. S'posin'
(3:15) 13. Look Up
(3:52) 14. Goodnight Ladies
(5:20) 15. If I Should Lose You
(4:53) 16. Hollerin' The Blues
(5:13) 17. Stretch Pants

Digitally remastered two-fer containing a pair of complete original albums showcasing Sonny Stitt in a quartet setting with organist Don Patterson: Low Flame and Feeling's. on the two LPs, the group is completed by Paul Weeden on guitar and Billy James on drums. While Stitt and Patterson cut plenty of albums together, the sessions included here mark the entire recorded output by this exact quartet. Essential Jazz Classics. https://www.amazon.ca/Low-Flame-Feelins-Sonny-Stitt/dp/B00E22768Q

Personnel: Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Sonny Stitt; Drums – Billy James; Guitar – Paul Weeden; Organ – Don Patterson

Low Flame + Feelin's

Motoshi Kosako, Paul McCandless - Place in the Heart

Styles: Harp, Post Bop
Year: 2010
File: MP3@128K/s
Time: 72:10
Size: 69,3 MB
Art: Front

(7:31) 1. Inner Nature
(6:11) 2. Night Follows the Day
(6:31) 3. Unopened Gift
(6:07) 4. Waltz for Terra
(4:57) 5. Crossroads
(4:55) 6. Babbling of Drunkard
(6:07) 7. Barking At the Moon
(5:22) 8. Idle talk
(6:24) 9. Spanish Stairs
(4:37) 10. No Sure Sense
(4:06) 11. Place in the Heart Part 1 & 2
(9:21) 12. Place in the Heart Part 3 & 4

Born in Matsuyama City, Motoshi Kosako started his musical career playing piano and guitar with professional jazz bands in Japan. In 1997 he moved to the United States, where he is currently the principal harpist of Stockton Symphony Orchestra, and where he received the ''Best of Sacramento''-award from Sacramento Magazine, which described that “Kosako plays with a fluid, modern style that evokes Keith Jarrett and Chick Corea.”. Mr. Kosako has released six albums: ''Celestial Harp I'', ''Celestial Harp II'', ''Living Harp'', the jazz trio-album ''Naked Wonder'' with Bill Douglass (bass, Chinese bamboo flute) and Daryl van Druff (drums), the duo-album ''Place In The Heart'' with Grammy-award winning Paul McCandless (oboe, English horn, soprano sax, bass clarinet), and the current release ''On The Way Home''. https://www.musicians-corner.net/Motoshi-Kosako-A-thought-on-musicians-role-in-society/

This album should be one of the most unique duo collaborations in history of Jazz. Grammy Award winning multi-instrumentalist Paul McCandless and innovative harpist-improviser Motoshi Kosako create very fresh sounding ensemble together. All tunes are original compositions and feature lyrical and virtuosic improvisation of McCandless and Kosako. Recorded in 2010. https://motoshikosako.bandcamp.com/album/place-in-the-heart

Personnel: Motoshi Kosako; harp; Paul McCandless; oboe, English horn,soprano sax, bass clarinet

Place in the Heart

Jack Jones - The Jack Jones Christmas Album

Styles: Christmas
Year: 1964
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:15
Size: 82,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:43)  1. Sleigh Ride
(2:40)  2. White Christmas
(3:32)  3. The Village Of St. Bernadette
(2:00)  4. My Favorite Things
(2:54)  5. I'll Be Home For Christmas
(4:13)  6. Medley: Angels We Have Heard On High / Silent Night / Adeste Fideles
(2:55)  7. Do You Hear What I Hear?
(2:34)  8. Lullaby For Christmas Eve
(2:34)  9. The Christmas Song
(1:39) 10. Mistletoe And Holly
(2:06) 11. The Christmas Waltz
(5:19) 12. Medley: God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen / It Came Upon A Midnight Clear / The First Noel

For his second seasonal collection, recorded in 1969 (following 1964's The Jack Jones Christmas Album), Jack Jones took a more eclectic, contemporary approach, including spiritual (if not specifically holiday) songs like the socially conscious "Some Children See Him" (which posited a multi-racial Christ child) and the recent Edwin Hawkins Singers hit "Oh Happy Day." "Little Altar Boy" was also given a gospel arrangement, while "O Little Town of Bethlehem" was rendered a cappella with chorus. "Christmas Day" from the recent musical Promises, Promises may have seemed like a standard-in-the-making, though it did not become one. Still, Jones sounds more comfortable on traditional fare like "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" and "Silver Bells." ~ William Ruhlmann https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-jack-jones-christmas-album-mw0000121613

The Jack Jones Christmas Album

Deborah Silver - The Gold Standards

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:00
Size: 91,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:29) 1. Teach Me Tonight
(4:29) 2. The Nearness Of You
(2:55) 3. The Glory Of Love (Feat. Ann Hampton Callaway)
(2:23) 4. I Could Have Danced All Night
(3:20) 5. I've Got A Crush On You (Feat. Jack Jones)
(3:05) 6. Ain't Misbehavin'
(2:26) 7. Never On Sunday
(3:14) 8. On A Slow Boat To China
(2:32) 9. I Can't Give You Anything But Love
(2:43) 10. Pennies From Heaven
(2:38) 11. My Heart Belongs To Daddy
(2:41) 12. It All Depends On You
(3:01) 13. I Could Write A Book

A gifted vocalist whose repertoire embraces jazz, pop, and the Great American Songbook, Deborah Silver offers a fresh take on classic material with her second album, 2016's The Gold Standards. Teaming with producers Steve Tyrell and Jon Allen (who've worked with Rod Stewart, Diana Ross, and Kristin Chenoweth) and arranger Alan Broadbent (best known for his work with Paul McCartney, Michael Bublé, and Barbra Streisand), here Silver interprets old standards, show tunes, and popular favorites with a warm, personable approach. The Gold Standards also includes duets with Grammy-winning singer Jack Jones and acclaimed jazz artist Ann Hampton Callaway.~Mark Deming https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-gold-standards-mw0002985553

The Gold Standards

Jack Jezzro - Cocktail Party Bossa Nova

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:42
Size: 131,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:36)  1. A Foggy Day
(4:02)  2. Wave
(3:46)  3. Mack the Knife
(3:26)  4. The Girl from Ipanema
(3:01)  5. One Note Samba
(3:28)  6. Sway
(4:14)  7. On Green Dolphin Street
(4:12)  8. The Days of Wine and Roses
(3:27)  9. Samba of Brazil
(3:37) 10. What a Diff'rence a Day Made
(4:39) 11. My Little Boat
(3:49) 12. Never on Sunday
(3:43) 13. Beautiful Love
(3:36) 14. The Shadow of Your Smile
(3:56) 15. Bossa Nova Dance

Jack Jezzro is a musician and producer who has enjoyed a long and successful career as a studio musician, accompanying a wide variety of major artists on their recordings, as well as crafting his own albums in which he shows off his talent and versatility as a guitarist. Jezzro was born in Rivesville, West Virginia on December 2, 1957. He had a keen interest in music from an early age, starting to play the piano when he was just three. He taught himself to play guitar from listening to records by Chet Atkins, and in his teens, he learned to break down the individual parts from songs he loved by Simon & Garfunkel, James Taylor, and the Doobie Brothers. After high school, Jezzro studied at West Virginia University; their music school didn't have a program for the guitar, but Jezzro could also play the bass, and his skills on the instrument led to him to a membership in the Charleston Symphony Orchestra while still attending WVU. Jezzro went on to attend the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York, where he was mentored by noted bassist James VanDemark. Just as he did at WVU, Jezzro soon joined the local symphony, the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra, as a bassist, while also honing his chops as a jazz guitarist. In 1981, he relocated to Nashville, Tennessee, where he became the bassist with the Nashville Symphony Orchestra, a position he held for ten years. In the mid-'80s, he made his way into the prestigious world of session work when he became part of the Nashville String Machine, a string section for hire that regularly appeared on recordings by some of the major stars of country and pop music, from Garth Brooks and Faith Hill to Bruce Springsteen and Matchbox 20. In 1988, Jezzro stepped out as a solo artist with the release of his first album as a headliner, Step on It, which was released in Japan by Pony Canyon Records. (A revised edition of the disc was released in the United States as A Day's Journey.) Over the next 30 years, Jezzro would release a steady stream of jazz, country, pop, Latin, and inspirational albums (most through the Green Hill label) that focused on his tasteful but expert guitar work and his interplay with other musicians. Jezzro also continued to work steadily as a session player and a producer, overseeing his own sessions as well as those of other Green Hill artists. His work as an artist and producer has earned him one Grammy nomination and seven Dove Award nominations to date. The prolific bassist has played on or produced over 300 albums, and in 2017 alone, he produced By Request: Most Requested Songs for jazz pianist Beegie Adair, released his own album Sinatra on Guitar, and brought out a sequel to his 2010 album Christmas Jazz titled Christmas Jazz 2. ~ Mark Deming https://www.allmusic.com/artist/jack-jezzro-mn0000779112/biography

Cocktail Party Bossa Nova

Anastasia Gilliam - Slip Beneath The Covers Vol 1

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:32
Size: 77,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:13)  1. Georgia On My Mind
(4:31)  2. Going to California
(3:37)  3. The Voice
(3:22)  4. What a Wonderful World
(4:37)  5. Cry Me a River
(3:23)  6. At Last
(1:56)  7. Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)
(3:57)  8. What's Going On
(2:53)  9. Crazy

For over 15 years fans have been begging Anastasia for a cd of cover tunes. People Love the way she can take a song, breathe some of her magic into it & create something unique to make it her own in a way that most have never witnessed before. “Slip Beneath the Covers” Volume 1 is the first in a series of cover CDs due to be released by the artist from 2007-2009. “I wanted to begin the series on a slightly romantic note, so I compiled a list of some of my favorite songs & the rest seemed to come naturally.”

People from all over the world travel to the lush, tropical island of Maui to frolic in this South Pacific paradise, not knowing what to expect when they stop off for some live music & one of those “blue foo-foo drinks with the umbrella” at one of the local night clubs. Much to their amazement, they come to find that they too have just discovered one of the best kept secrets of the Hawaiian islands!

Anastasia performed with her band, The VooDoo Suns for over 7 years & also juggled 3 duet projects, each with their own special attributes. Three guys, three different instruments, three different genres of music to explore with each of them. R&R, R&B, Jazz, Country, Originals & beyond. Her voice is so versatile that it’s hard to put her into just one category. “I wanted to perform all kinds of music & I wanted to take everything back to the essential basics. There is something pure & authentic in music performed with just a voice, guitar & percussion or a piano or keyboard to accompany it. That thought was the inspiration behind my duet projects. It’s been so well received & so many people wanted to take home a part of what they’d experienced that making a series of cover CDs was the logical next step.” http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/anastasiagilliam

Slip Beneath The Covers  Vol 1

Andrée Pagès - Swings Both Ways

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:00
Size: 135.1 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[4:09] 1. Nature Boy
[2:43] 2. It's Crazy
[5:01] 3. Lover Man
[3:31] 4. Get Out Of Town
[3:44] 5. St. Louis Blues
[4:40] 6. Sophisticated Lady
[6:23] 7. Born To Be Blue
[3:03] 8. Moonglow
[5:43] 9. My Man's Gone Now
[3:20] 10. He's Funny That Way
[9:28] 11. 'round Midnight
[3:02] 12. Yesterdays
[4:06] 13. What's Her Name

For 25 years, from New York to Macau, Andree Pages and Jay Elfenbein have played together in “Swings Both Ways” ensembles, from duo to quintet, playing a repertoire of American jazz standards, French chansons, bossa novas and old blues—songs by Duke Ellington, the Gershwins, Coltrane, Jacques Brel, Charles Trenet, Jobim, Nina Simone and Ray Charles, and originals.

The two recently returned to the U.S. after 4 years in France, where they played the Petit Journal de Montparnasse, Le Cave du Jazz, and La Tête des Trains, and performed widely in public and private venues in the Fontainebleau area.

Swings Both Ways

Friday, December 3, 2021

Antonella Vitale Quartet & Friends - Raindrops

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:41
Size: 163,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:31) 1. What The World Needs Now Is Love
(6:12) 2. Walk On By
(5:12) 3. The Look Of Love
(6:01) 4. I'll Never Fall In Love Again
(6:04) 5. I Say A Little Prayer
(6:14) 6. Alfie
(3:30) 7. Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head
(5:26) 8. (They Long To Be) Close To You
(5:36) 9. Do You Know The Way To San Jose
(7:03) 10. This Guy In Love With You
(4:56) 11. Tra La Sabbia E Il Mare Aperto
(3:31) 12. La Mia Ombra
(5:20) 13. Gabi

She sang in various trio and quartet formations with Andrea Beneventano, Massimo D'Agostino, Andrea Avena, Pietro Ciancaglini, Lorenzo Tucci, Francesco Puglisi, Stefano Sabatini, Nicola Stilo, Claudio Colasazza, Gianni Savelli, Mauro Verrone, Mauro Battisti, Carlo Battisti. She now teaches singing at the New Mississippi Jazz School in Rome. Previously, she studied singing and piano at the Scuola Popolare di Musica Testaccio in Rome, where she followed Nicola Stilo's workshops and where she joined Danilo Terenzi's big band as the solo singer.

In 2003, her first solo album is released by Alphamusic; in support she has Andrea Beneventano, Francesco Puglisi, Lorenzo Tucci and Aldo Bassi. In 2001 and 2002, she realised a CD-Test for the magazine Audio Car Stereo, with songs written, composed and sang by herself. In 1999, she participated at the Ciampino Jazz Festival in duet with the guitarist Andrea Memeo under the name JAZZ TANDEM. Luigi Onori from the pages of the Il Manifesto: ...the duet Jazz in Tandem composed by Antonella Vitale and Andrea Memeo warmed up the spectators with the enthusiasm and warmth of their approach.

Vitale has an excellent voice and a charisma that flows from a ductile and personal voice in any language she sings in. Italian, English or Brazilian...". In 1998, she came first in the modern singing section of the contest Concorso Nazionale Musicisti Citta` di Latina and won an award in the Ciampino Jazz Festival contest (guitar and voice duet). In June, 1997 she took part to the prize contest Citta` di Colleferro, where she came third in the jazz section. In 1996, she took part in the realisation of a soundtrack CD for Primrose Music, recording choirs and solo vocals. https://www.womex.com/virtual/alfamusic_label/antonella_vitale

Raindrops

Roy Hargrove - Public Eye

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:32
Size: 155,5 MB
Art: Front

(6:52) 1. Public Eye
(6:21) 2. Spiritual Companion
(7:33) 3. September In The Rain
(4:47) 4. Lada
(5:38) 5. Once In A While
(5:08) 6. Hartbreaker
(8:01) 7. End Of A Love Affair
(6:14) 8. Night Watch
(6:24) 9. You Don't Know What Love Is
(5:16) 10. Little Bennie (Crazeology)
(5:15) 11. What's New

Roy Hargrove's second recording as a leader features the 21-year-old trumpeter in late 1990 essentially playing bebop. Joined by altoist Antonio Hart, pianist Stephen Scott, bassist Christian McBride, and drummer Billy Higgins, Hargrove shows why he was so highly rated from the start of his career. On such numbers as "September in the Rain," "End of a Love Affair," "Crazeology," and four of his straight-ahead originals, Hargrove plays in a style not that different from Lee Morgan but with his own soulful sound, revitalizing the jazz tradition with his enthusiastic ideas. A fun set.~Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/public-eye-mw0000674417

Personnel: Trumpet – Roy Hargrove; Alto Saxophone – Antonio Hart; Double Bass – Christian McBride; Drums – Billy Higgins; Piano – Stephen Scott

Public Eye

Roy Hargrove, Mulgrew Miller - In Harmony Disc 1, Disc 2

Album: In Harmony Disc 1

Styles: Trumpet And Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:56
Size: 119,3 MB
Art: Front + Back

(9:09) 1. What Is this Thing Called Love
(8:24) 2. This Is Always
(8:36) 3. I Remember Clifford
(8:36) 4. Triste
(8:04) 5. Invitation
(9:44) 6. Con Alma

Album: In Harmony Disc 2

Time: 50:51
Size: 116,9 MB

(8:29) 1. Never Let Me Go
(9:12) 2. Just In Time
(6:58) 3. Fungii Mama
(5:57) 4. Monk's Dream
(7:27) 5. Ruby My Dear
(7:36) 6. Blues For Mr. Hill
(5:10) 7. O.W. (Encore)

In ballet, a "pas de deux" is a dance or figure for two performers. In jazz, the concept of two musicians playing together called a duo, has been a fairly familiar concept and undertake by the likes of Stan Getz and Kenny Barron, Chick Corea and Gary Burton as well as pianist Bill Evans and Tony Bennett. Trumpeter Roy Hargrove and pianist Mulgrew Miller have now added their names to this construct with the issuance of In Harmony which captured these now deceased giants in a previously unreleased live recordings from 2006 and 2007. Co-produced by Zev Feldman and Larry Clothier with executive producer George Klabin, Resonance Records is offering a deluxe limited edition (7000 units) 180 gram hand-numbered 2-LP set, made available in co-operation with the Hargrove and Miller estates.

In this lip smacking thirteen composition recital, Hargrove and Miller take full advantage of those familiar melodies from the American Standards Songbook or jazz touchstones, both of which provide those in attendance with the comfort of acquaintanceship. From the very first notes of the opening track, Cole Porter's "What Is This Thing Called Love," it is apparent that Hargrove and Miller were musicians who appreciated and supported each other through their creative efforts. On the following track "This Is Always," Hargrove picks up the flugelhorn to deliver a melodically mellow sound that is seamlessly supported by Miller's sympathetic piano gradations and subtleties. Although Hargrove arrived on the jazz scene several generations removed from Clifford Brown, he did view him as his idol and so it was not surprising that Benny Golson's "I Remember Clifford" was included in this release. With the clarity and brightness of his tone, Hargrove offers a very sensitive ballad reading of the number, while Miller's technical skills are fully and aptly blended in offering support.

This duo effort by Hargrove and Miller was for the most part a step out of character for both musicians, as Hargrove had never recorded an album without a drummer, although Miller had done a duo effort with the Danish bassist Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen. But duos can work, much like children playing in a schoolyard, with a give and take that does not attempt to crowd out each other. Two instances of this are Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Triste" and the standard "Invitation." On the former, Miller opens the number by laying down a bossa nova beat, which Hargrove uses to develop some sharp punchy phrasing, that leads to some musical banter between the players at a high level of inventiveness. The latter tune sparkles along in a cheerful way with Miller developing long melodic lines indicating that each note matters as part of the flow. Hargrove demonstrates his silky flair overlaying Miller's note striking.

When the needle drops on any track in this session, listeners are treated to pristine sound restoration and the understanding that the principals did not "mail in" their performances. For example, on the Blue Mitchell number "Fungii Mama" Miller establishes the underlying calypso beat over which Hargrove prances and dances through the melody as the audience provides enthusiastic encouragement. Finally, since Hargrove came from Texas and Miller from Mississippi, the blues and soul tradition moored their upbringing, Hargrove's own composition "Blues For Mr. Hill" is a solid reminder of these roots. Built on a twelve bar blues theme established by Miller, he puts a floor under Hargrove as he develops his ideas based on the structure of the piece.

When Miller loads up for his intervention, he knows the path he wants to take with scale fragments, as well as ascending and descending chords, to arrive at his destination. Complementing this stellar release is an excellent booklet containing rare photos, an essay by Ted Panken, along with interviews and statements from Sonny Rollins, Christian McBride, Ron Carter among others~Pierre Giroux https://www.allaboutjazz.com/in-harmony-roy-hargrove-mulgrew-miller-resonance-records

Personnel: Roy Hargrove: trumpet; Mulgrew Miller: piano.

In Harmony Disc 1, Disc 2

Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Ann Hampton Callaway & Liz Callaway - Boom! Live At Birdland

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2011
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 79:06
Size: 152,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:03)  1. Got To Get You Into My Life / Happy Together
(6:26)  2. Come Together
(3:53)  3. Always Something There To Remind Me
(5:50)  4. A Case Of You
(0:49)  5. "Do You Remember Those Long Car Trips..."
(3:59)  6. Back-Seat-Of-The-Car Medley
(3:41)  7. Yesterday
(0:49)  8. "We Would Like To Take This Time..."
(4:46)  9. You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'
(0:38) 10. "Having A Dad Who Was A Reporter..."
(4:36) 11. Blowin' In The Wind
(0:52) 12. "I Wanted To Be The 6th Dimension..."
(5:24) 13. Didn't We / MacArthur Park
(4:27) 14. I Know A Place / Downtown
(3:49) 15. These Boots Are Made For Walkin'
(1:38) 16. "We Were Very Different..."
(5:16) 17. That's The Way I've Always Heard It Should Be
(2:58) 18. The Way We Were
(0:50) 19. "The Ed Sullivan Show..."
(8:54) 20. Stevie Wonder Medley
(0:16) 21. "One Album That Unites Us..."
(5:02) 22. You've Got A Friend

Broadway veteran Liz Callaway and cabaret/jazz vocalist Ann Hampton Callaway joined forces for an extended engagement at Birdland in 2011, exploring favorite pop songs from the 1960s and early '70s. The two sisters explain a little bit about their influences and thoughts about some of the songs between performances and connect with their attentive audiences. Whether singing together or individually, they capture the essence of each song, supported by pianist Alex Rybeck's lively arrangements. They're equally effective interpreting ballads like Carly Simon's "That's the Way I Always Heard It Should Be" and Marvin Hamlisch's "The Way We Were" as a duo, complementing one another's voices. They have a lot of fun playing off the Beatles' stoner favorite "Come Together" and offer a "Back-Seat-of-the-Car" medley that includes snippets of many favorites from the late '60s and early '70s. But the strongest songwriter represented in this collection is easily Stevie Wonder, who is honored with an extended medley of songs that mostly have been widely recorded by jazz artists. This live recording is an enjoyable look at the past that never bogs down into predictability. ~ Ken Dryden   
http://www.allmusic.com/album/boom!-live-at-birdland-mw0002159883

Personnel: Liz Callaway (background vocals); Ann Hampton Callaway (background vocals); Alex Rybeck (piano, background vocals); Ron Tierno (drums); Jered Egan (background vocals).

Frank Foster And The Loud Minority - Shiny Stockings


Styles: Saxophone Jazz 
Year: 1978
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:22
Size: 151,7 MB
Art: Front
( 9:15)  1. Shiny Stockings
(10:33)  2. Thruway Traffic
( 8:28)  3. Dayspring
( 9:41)  4. Four Five Six
(11:10)  5. Hills Of The North Rejoice
( 9:02)  6. Manhattan Fever
( 7:10)  7. Tomorrow's Blues Today

Frank Foster's Loud Minority big band was formed in the early 1970s, and made a raucous, politically oriented funk-fusion type recording for the Mainstream label. As the Black Nationalist movement was pronounced in those days, the Loud Minority fit in quite well, and spoke to a generation of listeners who were prone to accept their protestations against racism, oppression, and the immoral Vietnam War. This version, recorded a handful of years later, was a more refined and hard swinging musical effort, leaving the vocal outspokenness to the side, concentrating on the highly composed and arranged instrumental charts of Foster's making. Two recording sessions done a full year apart with slightly different 21 piece lineups feature Foster's still fearless approach to modern and progressive big-band music, accented by a multi-layered precept that in some ways reflects his time with Count Basie, but speaks more to the advanced Tadd Dameron/Oliver Nelson/Thad Jones-Mel Lewis sound distinctly rooted in Duke Ellington. 

Foster is ever mindful of how the individual voices of his bandmembers shape the music, but solos are reserved only for the leader's tenor or soprano saxophone, as well as trumpeter Sinclair Acey and trombonist Kiane Zawadi. The famous "Shiny Stockings" is treated here in a joyous holiday flair with all the trimmings, whether in bright flute flashes, arpeggiated piano riffs from Mickey Tucker, or rich brass burnishings, and that's all in just the melody. A paraphrase of "I'm Beginning to See the Light" is added by Foster's tenor. The New York City strut 6/8 time signature of "Manhattan Fever," initially done when Foster was leading small group sessions for the Blue Note label, is done here and expanded to big-band fare, with brilliant call and response variations that bear repeat listenings. "Thruway Traffic" is also distinctly urban and hip, evocative of the multi-dimensional-sounding rat race life in the big city. The most startling piece, "Dayspring," is only loosely based on Clifford Brown's "Joyspring." It churns with dazzling layers of counterpointed modality, flavored by the Afro-Cuban congas of Roger Blank, and has Tucker driving the juggernaut express with three simple piano chords as the horns have a field day on this most sumptuous chart one of Foster's all-time best.

The subtle side is represented by his arrangement of the traditional piece "Hills of the North Rejoice," theme music for a rural vista, with tambourine, Foster's slightly sharp tenor, and Tucker's repeat, rolling hills chorus. Never forgetting the blues via his roots in his native Cincinnati or his home for an important time in Detroit, "Four, Five, Six" has that Basie or Oliver Nelson abstract truth feel while mixing in the simple melodic style of "Bags Groove," while "Tomorrow's Blues Today" is a steady and cool late-night clubbin' cruiser. There's absolutely no filler, no wasted motion or excess, and nothing but solid musicianship on this guaranteed gold recording that ranks with the very best that modern big-band jazz has to offer. It belongs in every collection  period! 
~ Michael G. Nastos http://www.cduniverse.com/productinfo.asp?pid=4740519&style=music&fulldesc=T

Personnel: Frank Foster (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Ted Dumper, Ted Dunbar (guitar); William Saxton, Charles Williams (alto saxophone, tenor saxophone); Leroy Barton (alto saxophone); William Cody, Doug Harris, Bill Cody, Bill Saxton (tenor saxophone); Kenny Rogers (baritone saxophone); Joe Gardner, Robert Rutledge, Robert Ruthledge, Chris Albert, Don McIntosh, Sinclair Acey, Virgil Jones (trumpet); Janice Robinson, Emmet McDonald, Kiane Zawadi, Charles Stephens (trombone); Bill Lowe (bass trombone); Bill Davis , Willie J. Davis (tuba); Mike Tucker (piano); Mary Earl (electric bass); Charlie Persip (drums); Babafume Akunyun, Roger Blank (percussion).

Shiny Stockings

Nicholas Payton - Smoke Sessions

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:23
Size: 154,7 MB
Art: Front

(7:43) 1. Hangin' and a Jivin'
(7:03) 2. Big George
(6:48) 3. Levin's Lope
(6:51) 4. No Lonely Nights
(6:30) 5. Lullaby for a Lamppost (for Danny Barker), Pt. 1
(6:23) 6. Lullaby for a Lamppost (for Danny Barker), Pt. 2
(4:35) 7. Q for Quincy Jones
(5:29) 8. Gold Dust Black Magic
(6:39) 9. Turn-a-Ron
(9:19) 10. Toys

Nicholas Payton has a new project called Smoke Sessions. The album has its roots in Payton’s love of Miles Davis’ 1966 album Four & More. Payton has convened two legendary musicians who played with Davis on that album, bassist Ron Carter and special guest saxophonist George Coleman. He asked Coleman to contribute a pair of tunes. (A third contributor to Four & More, pianist Herbie Hancock, is represented by the composition “Toys).” Rounding out the quartet is drummer Karriem Riggins with Payton filling the keyboard chair and playing the trumpet. Payton explains, “Miles Davis’ ‘Four’ & More was the album that really inspired me to take up music seriously,” Payton explains. “Ever since then, Ron Carter has been an idol and a favorite musician of mine. As long as I’ve been leading bands, I’ve patterned my choice of bassists by the metric of how much Ron they have in their playing. When I’ve looked for pianists in my band over the years, it’s often predicated on how much Herbie they have in their sound. So, this album is really a dream come true for me.”

“Hangin’ and a Jinvin’” is our first taste of the project and instantly establishes that Payton will not preset a straight-ahead album. Instead, he keeps the feels contemporary with a blend of swing, funk, soul, and hip-hop influences. With Riggins’ drum fluidity and Carter’s rock-solid time feel on the bass, this is brought to life. Payton starts on the Fender Rhodes. Playing with tiny motifs and shifting chords, one can hear Carter’s basslines following wherever Payton may lead. Payton eventually switches to the trumpet, and that is when things really heat up. Payton and Carter have strong communication with each other, and it is a delight to hear. Carter explains, “Listen to him play trumpet. He’s listening to my response to what he does if the trumpet players of today want to try to put him in a place, he should be up there because he listens to what the bass player contributes to his solo.”

“Big George” is the first track on which saxophonist George Colman appears, “Turn-a-Ron” is Coleman’s second guest spot; both are excellent. Speaking of “Big George,” Payton says, “I feel like George didn’t get as much credit as he deserved for being a part of Miles’s experimentations in alternate changes and chord progressions,” Payton says. “That’s why the songs on the album with George tend to be basically four-bar vamps – those four-bar turnarounds and what they would do with them were so influential in changing the landscape of how musicians play chord changes. It was important to me to get into that stuff that they did back in the 60s. George being there was like the cherry on top.” “Big George” is a medium groove that does just that, explores the harmonic possibilities of a simple set of changes between the big ears of this jaunty ensemble. Payton stays on the Rhodes for this one and lets Carter and Colman take the lead.

Smoke Sessions allows Payton to engage with two icons of jazz, Ron Carter and George Colman. The result is the multi-instrumentalist brings his trademark approach of contemporary styles to the elegance and time-honored tradition that these two giants represent. The elastic groove of Payton’s Fender Rhodes and trumpet playing is in full force here. Payton concludes, was “like a pinch-myself moment… I used to pretend I was playing with [these musicians] when I was a child, and now it’s happening. I literally felt like I was walking on air. To have someone I’ve listened to on record and admired from afar actually be a part of something that I created was just beyond my wildest imagination. I remained in a dream state for a couple of months afterward".~Icrom Bigrad https://jazzsensibilities.com/reviews/nicholas-payton/

Personnel: Nicholas Payton, trumpet, Fender Rhodes; Ron Carter, bass; Karriem Riggin, drums; Guest: George Coleman, tenor saxophone

Smoke Sessions